Brain Walking

In this day and age of interesting graphics and visuals, the words brain walking conjures up a funny mental image.

But the truth of the matter is that brain walking, meaning getting some exercise by talking brain and body for a walk is very important for your brain, which makes it important for any process in your body which needs a highly functioning brain.

(Can you think of a process not requiring a healthy brain?)

In the last couple of decades, we have discovered some very important information about the human brain.

One fact is that it continues to grow new brain cells throughout its existence, which is very important to those of us with older brains who are worried about dementia.

What is the single most important factor of four pillars of brain health?

Physical exercise, one of which could be brain walking.
Chapter Six of
Brainfit for Life, by Simon Evans, Ph.D. and Paul Burghardt, Ph.D. is called "Taking Your Brain for a Walk", interestingly enough, and Professors Evans and Burghardt have provided us a powerful resource for brain walking, including some good information on the difference between physical exercise and physical activity.

The good news is both are beneficial for neurogenesis, and the intensity and regularity of our brain walks is totally up to us.

There is a down side though, if we do not continue once we start, the benefits slip away quickly.

They call that UIOLI, for use it or lose it.

In the words of the authors;

"The best way to start as you begin to incorporate physical activity/exercise into your life is to do so slowly.

Start with increasing your physical activity. This will help. For example, all the advice you’ve heard a thousand times before (but haven’t followed yet): take the stairs instead of the elevator; park your car away from the store entrance; walk on short-distance errands instead of driving. It will be important, however, to eventually incorporate some fitness-appropriate exercise. Again, if you are new to this you should work with a professional and your physician to define a routine that’s right for your level of condition.

Another idea we want you to accept is that you should strive for ‘prehab’ over ‘rehab.’ With prehab you build up your reserves, your health bank account that you can draw from on those rainy-days when you need a little extra cushion to protect

your brain’s health. If you are continually working on your physical health, when you do experience a little extra challenge, you will be much more prepared to deal with it."

I was worried initially that it would be necessary for me to buy an expensive club membership, hire a personal trainer, and buy lots of expensive equipment to insure neurogenesis thought out my senior years.

Not true, according to Scott and Angie Tousignant. They say in their e-book More Love, Less Fat that we can work out at home using tools no more complicated than an exercise ball and dumb bells and stairs.

HIIT for Brain Walking

All I need to do is practice something called HIIT, short for high intensity interval training, and I get to define what high intensity is for me.

So can you imagine doing callisthenics from your school days in 30 second intervals for ten (10) ten minutes a couple of times a day?

Or just taking your brain out for a walk around the neighborhood for ten minutes, moving fast enough that it is hard to talk and move at the same time will go along way toward ensuring that neurogenesis that helps us through our dotage. Let me remind you why, from Evans and Burghardt again.

...."Other studies have shown the importance of physical activity on decreasing the susceptibility to heart-disease, diabetes and cancer. In addition there is an ever strengthening link among these diseases to mood and cognitive disorders. To beat our point into the ground further, more and more scientific studies show the link between physical activity and improved mood and cognition. So in this case 2+2 does equal 4, and increased physical activity is essential to all aspects of our health, and subsequently our quality of life. What is starting to come to light is the vital importance of physical activity on brain health."

I do not think any brain walk is complete with some novel learning challenge, especially when my brain is pumped up and all the neurons are flexed and the axons are stretched.

Don't worry — your e-mail address is totally secure.
I promise to use it only to send you AskMiketheCounselor2.

Would You Share Something That You Are Grateful For?

When I was beginning my personal growth journey, a wise person told me that when I was feeling resentful or afraid or sad, that I should remember the phrase "gratitude is the attitude" when I was ready to feel better. That phrase has helped me feel better tens of thousands of times.

Would you share what you are most grateful for? Your story could be just what another person is searching for to renew themselves? Thanks.

Your story will appear on a Web page exactly the way you enter it here. You can wrap a word in square brackets to make it appear bold. For example [my story] would show as my story on the Web page containing your story.

TIP: Since most people scan Web pages, include your best thoughts in your first paragraph.

I am currenty in San Diego, California where my son just graduated from Marine Corps. basic training. He lost 20 pounds. Dad, who is extremely proud, has not had access to his kitchen since last Tuesd…

Does eating a hamburger and french fries count as a Keto diet breakdown? Not if the amount of carbohydrates does not exceed the limits you are giving yourself per day. It probably does count as a brea…

Had the last couple od days off from substitute teaching, luckily, as I have been in serious battle with my sinus cavities. Between kiddie colds and fall pollen I have my semi-annual sinus infection/c…